2
15
New 'negative light' technology hides data transfers in plain sight (unsw.edu.au)
3
Dense, dark forests in Europe are a modern phenomenon (phys.org)
2
Could a biocomputer made from human brain cells play DOOM? (gigazine.net)
1
The Age of the Starchitect Is Over (dezeen.com)
1
3D-printing platform rapidly produces complex electric machines (news.mit.edu)
2
Scientists Discover "Levitating" Time Crystals That You Can Hold in Your Hand (nyu.edu)
5
Using light-based computing to tackle complex challenges (queensu.ca)
1
Explosion of Black Hole Could Explain (Almost) Everything (umass.edu)
4
AI "swarms" could distort democracy (mpg.de)
2
New class of magnets uses earth-abundant elements, avoids rare-earth metals (phys.org)
2
Massive nanoparticles follow the rules of quantum mechanics (univie.ac.at)
3
Researchers Use D&D to Test AI's Long-term Decision-making Abilities (ucsd.edu)
1
A twitch in time? Quantum collapse models hint at tiny time fluctuations (phys.org)
2
Positive thinking can boost the power of vaccines (newatlas.com)
1
Scientists Put Teeth into Water-Driven Gears (nyu.edu)
2
Using the Physics of Radio Waves to Empower Smarter Edge Devices (duke.edu)
2
Research identify two psychological traits that predict conspiracy theory belief (psypost.org)
1
World's smallest autonomous robots could one day save your life (newatlas.com)
1
Roman soldiers defending Hadrian's Wall infected by parasites, study finds (cam.ac.uk)
2
Twice Accused of Murder, This Writer Later Foresaw the Sinking of the Titanic (smithsonianmag.com)
2
Breaking barriers in attoscience with the shortest light pulse ever created (icfo.eu)
2
Rage bait: the psychology behind social media's angriest posts (theconversation.com)
4
New concept for energy transfer between gravitational waves and light (hzdr.de)
2
A universal law could explain how large trades change stock prices (phys.org)
1
Why cures made sense in mysterious times (medicalxpress.com)
14
Italian bears living near villages have evolved to be smaller and less agressive (phys.org)
1
Consciousness: Where are we, where are we going, and what if we get there? (frontiersin.org)
6
Humans rank above meerkats but below beavers in monogamy league table (theguardian.com)
1
QuantWare announces scaling breakthrough with 10k qubit Quantum Processor (quantware.com)
1
Did Hitler really Have a 'Micropenis'? (theguardian.com)
3
Supercomputer Creates One of the Most Realistic Virtual Brains Ever Seen (sciencealert.com)
1
3D-printable concrete alternative hardens in three days, not four weeks (newatlas.com)
1
A decade-long chimp war ended in a baby boom for the victors (livescience.com)
1
Revolutionary biofuel battery is inspired by human metabolism (newatlas.com)
1
Princeton puts quantum computing on the fast track with new qubit (princeton.edu)
30
Humans have remote touch 'seventh sense' like sandpipers (techxplore.com)
3
Universe's expansion 'is now slowing, not speeding up' (ras.ac.uk)
3
Royal Navy installs quantum clock in robotic submarine (newatlas.com)
1
Neuromorphic computing could reduce energy use of chips and advance AGI (usc.edu)
3
Sustainable memristors from shiitake mycelium for high-frequency bioelectronics (plos.org)
2
Time crystals could power future quantum computers (aalto.fi)
2
World’s First AI-designed viruses a step towards AI-generated life (nature.com)
3
An abiding mystery of the French Revolution is solved – by epidemiology (nature.com)
2
Four of the best dumbphones for a digital detox (dezeen.com)
1
New powerful space object 'Punctum' doesn't fit into any known category (livescience.com)
12
Cornell's world-first 'microwave brain' computes differently (newatlas.com)
1
One Universal Antiviral to Rule Them All? (columbia.edu)
1
Quantum alternative to GPS navigation will be tested on US Military spaceplane (theconversation.com)
4
New evidence suggests Neolithic farmers cannibalized enemies (phys.org)
1
Pure quantum state without the need for cooling (ethz.ch)
1
Meet the Universe's Earliest Confirmed Black Hole: A Monster at the Dawn of Time (utexas.edu)
2
DNA Casts Doubt over Theory on What Killed Napoleon's Forces (sciencealert.com)
2
Phaistos Disc (wikipedia.org)
2
Are the JWST's Little Red Dots Supermassive Black Hole Seeds? (universetoday.com)
4
Korean population could drop by 85% in next 100 years (koreaherald.com)
2
Lightweight plastic mirrors drop cost of solar thermal energy by 40% (newatlas.com)
2
Rethinking Memory in AI: Taxonomy, Operations, Topics, and Future Directions (arxiv.org)
1
Light-powered NPUs could massively reduce energy consumption in AI data centers (livescience.com)
1
On the JPMC/Quantinuum certified quantum randomness demo (scottaaronson.blog)
2
Mysterious Giants May Be a Whole New Kind of Life That No Longer Exists (sciencealert.com)
2
Longest quantum communications link stretches over 8k miles (newatlas.com)
2
When did human language emerge? (news.mit.edu)
2
Smell like a god: Ancient sculptures were scented (phys.org)
6
Violent supernovae triggered at least two Earth extinctions (phys.org)
1
It's no surprise to see art deco being avidly embraced by the likes of Elon Musk (dezeen.com)
1
Largest automated port will handle 65M containers per year (newatlas.com)
3
First "Synthetic Biological Intelligence" runs on living human cells (newatlas.com)
1
Smallest shooting video game uses nanoscale technology (phys.org)
3
The evolving pigment palette of European skin as seen through ancient DNA (phys.org)
2
Breakthrough study challenges long-held beliefs about the shape of atomic nuclei (surrey.ac.uk)
1
A single protein may have helped shape the emergence of spoken language (rockefeller.edu)
4
Trump signs executive order to promote "beautiful federal civic architecture" (dezeen.com)
1
Rats Hiding from Scary "Robogator" Reveal How the Brain Creates a "Worry Map" (iflscience.com)
1
AI slashes cost and time for chip design, but that is not all (princeton.edu)
5
Roman Empire's Air Pollution May Have Lowered the IQ of Europe (sciencealert.com)
3
AI chatbots show dementia-like cognitive decline in tests (medicalxpress.com)
1
Surprisingly slow speed of human thought calculated by Caltech (newatlas.com)
1
Bronze Age British Ate Their Enemies According to Gruesome Discovery (sciencealert.com)
1
VERSES Genius Outperforms OpenAI Model in Code-Breaking Challenge (verses.ai)
2
GPS-alternative tech swaps satellites for Earth fingerprints (newatlas.com)
1
Physicists Propose How to Test Anthropic Principle (iflscience.com)
1
Barbarian warriors in Roman times used stimulants in battle (phys.org)
1
Enormous Cache of Rare Earth Elements Hidden Inside Coal Ash Waste (utexas.edu)
2
New theory reveals the shape of a single photon (birmingham.ac.uk)
10
'Brain stars' store our memories like a microscopic filing cabinet (newatlas.com)
1
Plant-animal hybrid cells make solar-powered tissues, organs or meat (newatlas.com)
1
Monkeys would take 7 universe lifespans to type works of Shakespeare (newatlas.com)
1
Lab-Grown Human Brain Embodied in a Virtual World (danburonline.substack.com)
3
How fast is quantum entanglement? (tuwien.at)
49
Walking in short bursts consume 20-60% more energy than walking continuously (phys.org)
1
UTSA researchers reveal oversight in AI image recognition tools (utsa.edu)
3
Nanostructures in the deep ocean floor hint at life's origin (riken.jp)
3
Witch-hunting manual and social networks helped ignite Europe's witch craze (santafe.edu)
1
Map of Every Neuron in an Adult Fly Brain Could Be Nobel Prize Worthy (sciencealert.com)
5
Black hole radiation paradox could be solved – if they aren't what they seem (livescience.com)
1
All-bot app SocialAI stirs debate over AI-driven social media (axios.com)
1
Genetic tracing of market wildlife and viruses at the epicenter of the Covid-19 (cell.com)
27
Antarctica's Ozone Hole Is Healing and Set to Recover by 2066 (iflscience.com)
2